
Democrats Won’t Restore Abortion Rights But A People’s Movement Can
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Kenneth Surin, Professor emeritus and former Director of the Center for European Studies at Duke University to discuss the potential for another independence referendum in Scotland after Nicola Sturgeon announced plans for the vote, the obstacles that a referendum would face in the courts and why Sturgeon may have announced these plans despite its expected failure, why the issue of Scottish independence presents much to gain politically as the government in London is growing increasingly unpopular, and how the issue of Brexit complicates the possibility of independence for Scotland and how attitudes towards it have changed since the vote.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dian Maria Blandina, a medical doctor, researcher, and health activist to discuss how the IMF and its debt regime prevent countries on the African continent from putting up an adequate response on the African continent, how these loans have played in the related issue of vaccine apartheid and the hoarding of vaccines by rich countries, how the conditions put on IMF loans promote austerity in countries that receive loans and how that move to austerity promotes instability through IMF riots, and what the impact of these loans means for the future of pandemic response and public health on the African continent.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Ted Rall, award-winning editorial cartoonist and columnist, and author of the graphic novel, "The Stringer," to discuss the need to build a movement of poor and working people to fight back against the Supreme Court's decision to strip the right to an abortion from millions of people, the mainstream media's coverage of the war in Ukraine and the skewed version of reality that it creates to hide the reality of the war, and why the Democrats reliance on the abortion issue to propel them to electoral success is a doomed strategy.
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Kenneth Surin, Professor emeritus and former Director of the Center for European Studies at Duke University to discuss the potential for another independence referendum in Scotland after Nicola Sturgeon announced plans for the vote, the obstacles that a referendum would face in the courts and why Sturgeon may have announced these plans despite its expected failure, why the issue of Scottish independence presents much to gain politically as the government in London is growing increasingly unpopular, and how the issue of Brexit complicates the possibility of independence for Scotland and how attitudes towards it have changed since the vote.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dian Maria Blandina, a medical doctor, researcher, and health activist to discuss how the IMF and its debt regime prevent countries on the African continent from putting up an adequate response on the African continent, how these loans have played in the related issue of vaccine apartheid and the hoarding of vaccines by rich countries, how the conditions put on IMF loans promote austerity in countries that receive loans and how that move to austerity promotes instability through IMF riots, and what the impact of these loans means for the future of pandemic response and public health on the African continent.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Ted Rall, award-winning editorial cartoonist and columnist, and author of the graphic novel, "The Stringer," to discuss the need to build a movement of poor and working people to fight back against the Supreme Court's decision to strip the right to an abortion from millions of people, the mainstream media's coverage of the war in Ukraine and the skewed version of reality that it creates to hide the reality of the war, and why the Democrats reliance on the abortion issue to propel them to electoral success is a doomed strategy.